New study results consistent with dog domestication during Ice Age
FEBRUARY 19, 2020
by Matt McGowan, University of Arkansas
Analysis of Paleolithic-era teeth from a 28,500-year-old fossil site in the Czech Republic provides supporting evidence for two groups of canidsone dog-like and the other wolf-likewith differing diets, which is consistent with the early domestication of dogs.
The study, published in the Journal of Archaeolgical Science, was co-directed by Peter Ungar, Distinguished Professor of anthropology at the University of Arkansas.
The researchers performed dental microwear texture analysis on a sample of fossils from the Předmostí site, which contains both wolf-like and dog-like canids. Canids are simply mammals of the dog family. The researchers identified distinctive microwear patterns for each canid morphotype. Compared to the wolf-like canids, the teeth of the early dog canidscalled "protodogs" by the researchershad larger wear scars, indicating a diet that included hard, brittle foods. The teeth of the wolf-like canids had smaller scars, suggesting they consumed more flesh, likely from mammoth, as shown by previous research.
This greater durophagyanimal eating behavior suggesting the consumption of hard objectsamong the dog-like canids means they likely consumed bones and other less desirable food scraps within human settlement areas, Ungar said. It provides supporting evidence that there were two types of canids at the site, each with a distinct diet, which is consistent with other evidence of early-stage domestication.
More:
https://phys.org/news/2020-02-results-dog-domestication-ice-age.html